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Case Study 8.2 Lauren Burns Sammy Eastwood Brian Seo Chelsea Sizemore
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Page 1: Case Study 8.2 Lauren BurnsSammy Eastwood Brian SeoChelsea Sizemore.

Case Study 8.2Lauren Burns Sammy EastwoodBrian Seo Chelsea

Sizemore

Page 2: Case Study 8.2 Lauren BurnsSammy Eastwood Brian SeoChelsea Sizemore.

Introduction

Mordidas - Spanish [noun]

- a bite, kickback

- (slang) a bribe to pay a public official, in return the official does not ticket an individual

The Mexican government has been working to combat corruption, with limited success.

Police officers are poorly paid; they make half their salary based off mordidas

Page 3: Case Study 8.2 Lauren BurnsSammy Eastwood Brian SeoChelsea Sizemore.

Endemic Issue

From the Attorney General's office, the Treasury, to Mexican Customs, mordidas were so highly prevalent, customary

President Salinas De Gortari, 1988, first president to tackle mordidas, but failed

Page 4: Case Study 8.2 Lauren BurnsSammy Eastwood Brian SeoChelsea Sizemore.

Mordidas = BribesThis case study shows an excellent use of how bribes can

be used in typical or normal jobs. When, if ever, are bribes justifiable? How can we rid our business systems of them?

Page 5: Case Study 8.2 Lauren BurnsSammy Eastwood Brian SeoChelsea Sizemore.

Cultural Relativism

Cultural relativism-

• The view that all beliefs, customs, and ethics are relative to an individual within their own social context or cultural environment.

• "Right” and “wrong” are culture-specific.

• There is no universal standard for morals.

Page 6: Case Study 8.2 Lauren BurnsSammy Eastwood Brian SeoChelsea Sizemore.

Discourse Ethics

Step 1: Identify the immediate stakeholders - those who are most affected by the dilemma and can be gathered to solve it

Mordidas: In this example, the immediate stakeholders would be the police officer and the driver who has been pulled over.

Page 7: Case Study 8.2 Lauren BurnsSammy Eastwood Brian SeoChelsea Sizemore.

Discourse Ethics

Step 2: Establish a language for discussion

Mordidas: In this situation, the two stakeholders would be speaking in the language of money.

Page 8: Case Study 8.2 Lauren BurnsSammy Eastwood Brian SeoChelsea Sizemore.

Discourse Ethics

Step 3: Establish the goal - in discourse ethics the goal is always the peaceful and consensual resolution to the dilemma.

Mordidas: The ideal goal would be that the driver is able to bribe the traffic cop into not giving him a ticket

Page 9: Case Study 8.2 Lauren BurnsSammy Eastwood Brian SeoChelsea Sizemore.

Discourse Ethics

Step 4: Define the problem - this stage requires fairly lengthy elaborations by all those involved of exactly what they understand their obligations and interests to be

Mordidas: In this example, there is actually not a lengthy elaboration by the traffic cop or the driver; both understand what their obligations and interests are.

Page 10: Case Study 8.2 Lauren BurnsSammy Eastwood Brian SeoChelsea Sizemore.

Discourse Ethics

Step 5: Propose Solutions

Mordidas: The driver slips the equivalent of five dollars into the traffic cop's codebook. The officer takes it and allows the driver to leave without writing him a ticket.

Page 11: Case Study 8.2 Lauren BurnsSammy Eastwood Brian SeoChelsea Sizemore.

Corruption Perception Index

I think the informal agreements made by businessmen in Mexico is another example of discourse ethics because it follows all five steps.

Step 1: Stakeholders are the businessmen

Step 2: Language is money/deals/bribes

Step 3: Goal - make businessmen happy

Step 4: Businessmen have to express what they want from each other

Step 5: A solution is discussed

Page 12: Case Study 8.2 Lauren BurnsSammy Eastwood Brian SeoChelsea Sizemore.

It seems that the other officers in his department are also friends of his and therefore he shares a common bond with them, creating a relationship of social responsibility.

He relates more closely to his fellow officers than to everyone in the surrounding community.

Page 13: Case Study 8.2 Lauren BurnsSammy Eastwood Brian SeoChelsea Sizemore.

Ethics of Care

Making the nurturing of our immediate communities and the protecting of those closest to us the highest moral obligation

Page 14: Case Study 8.2 Lauren BurnsSammy Eastwood Brian SeoChelsea Sizemore.

Scenario...

An officer pulls over his nephew and an out of towner who he has never met.

Would he treat them differently using ethics of care? If so, why?

Page 15: Case Study 8.2 Lauren BurnsSammy Eastwood Brian SeoChelsea Sizemore.

His nephew.

.....why?

Page 16: Case Study 8.2 Lauren BurnsSammy Eastwood Brian SeoChelsea Sizemore.

Nephew Out of towner

- Has personal relationship and connection with him

- No relationship or connection with him

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Treatment

Thus, it is easier to be harsher to the out of towner because the officer will not feel an effect of the out of towner emotions or actions after pulling him over. However, he probably sees his nephew a lot more, and would have to deal with family talking and other actions that will affect the officer’s personal life more.

Page 18: Case Study 8.2 Lauren BurnsSammy Eastwood Brian SeoChelsea Sizemore.

Could there be other circumstances where he would treat his nephew more harshly?

He knows his nephew will always be his family, so he cannot be upset with him forever. Or if he did not like his nephew, he has a vindication against him, which could easily make the officer want more money from him.

Page 19: Case Study 8.2 Lauren BurnsSammy Eastwood Brian SeoChelsea Sizemore.

Other examples of ethics of care

In elementary school when you had to write people’s names down for talking. You would be more lenient to yours friends rather than to the people you didn’t like.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nF7H62Y6iio

Page 20: Case Study 8.2 Lauren BurnsSammy Eastwood Brian SeoChelsea Sizemore.

Web of Responsibility

The Police Officer cares for himself

He takes no thought

for other people

Stake holders:• Mayor, government officials

• Police, Law enforcement officials

• Citizens

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Affected Individuals

1. Mayor, Government officialsa. held responsible for the city and its laws and

regulations

b. with mordidas so prevalent and common, city ethics questioned

2. Law Enforcement officialsa. accustomed to mordidas - part of their expected

income

b. played the system to benefit themselves

3. Citizensa. knew inadvertently to the police traffic enforcement

system

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Ethics of Care

Stage Goal

Pre-conventional Stage 1: Obedience to authority

Stage 2: Nice behavior in exchange for future favors

Conventional Stage 3: Live up to others' expectations

Stage 4: Follow rules to maintain social order

Post-conventional Stage 5: Adhere to social contract when it is valid

Stage 6: Personal moral system based on abstract principles

Page 23: Case Study 8.2 Lauren BurnsSammy Eastwood Brian SeoChelsea Sizemore.

Mexican Police

Ethics of Care: Nephew and Strangero Conventional - to treat them fairlyo Post-conventional - based on familial, social contract

Page 24: Case Study 8.2 Lauren BurnsSammy Eastwood Brian SeoChelsea Sizemore.

Ethics of Care

• Normative theory

• Questions what makes actions right or wrong

• Ethics of care criticizes the applications of universal standards

• Applied to benefit those with potential to benefit you in the future

Page 25: Case Study 8.2 Lauren BurnsSammy Eastwood Brian SeoChelsea Sizemore.

Perspective

• 200 injured and 20 deathso Disbanding traffic tickets will not solve the problems

• The Mayor taking out traffic violations effectively ended mordidas

• Without traffic violations, more traffic related accidents rose in the lawless two months

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A Balance

• The balanceo Finding a solution to both the bribery and the

enforcement of laws and regulationso Requires holistic approach, ethics of care, and

scrutinous application of law and law enforcement

Page 27: Case Study 8.2 Lauren BurnsSammy Eastwood Brian SeoChelsea Sizemore.

Thank YouLauren Burns Sammy EastwoodBrian Seo Chelsea

Sizemore